A Blatantly Unconstitutional Gun Edict Highlights the Hazards of Emergency Powers
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham thinks violent crime gives her a license to rule by decree.

When New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham issued "a public health emergency order" that purportedly suspended the right to bear arms in Albuquerque and surrounding Bernalillo County last week, her justification was seemingly straightforward. "I have emergency powers," she told The New York Times. "Gun violence is an epidemic. Therefore, it's an emergency."
Grisham's stunt was widely condemned as blatantly unconstitutional, even by some leading supporters of gun control. But her legal rationale also underlined the perils posed by the sweeping emergency powers that legislators in many states have granted governors—a problem that was abundantly clear during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Grisham, a Democrat, laid the ground for her ban on public possession of operable firearms last Thursday, when she declared that gun violence in New Mexico "constitutes a statewide public health emergency of unknown duration" under the state's Public Health Emergency Response Act. That law defines a "public health emergency" as "an extremely dangerous condition or a highly infectious or toxic agent, including a threatening communicable disease, that poses an imminent threat of substantial harm."
Grisham also invoked New Mexico's All Hazard Emergency Management Act, saying gun violence "constitutes a man-made disaster causing or threatening widespread physical or economic harm that is beyond local control." In her gun order, which she issued the next day, Grisham asserted that violent crime is also "a condition of public health importance," which New Mexico's Public Health Act defines as "an infection, a disease, a syndrome, a symptom, an injury or other threat that is identifiable on an individual or community level and can reasonably be expected to lead to adverse health effects in the community."
Those labels were meant to trigger the "emergency powers" that Grisham is claiming. The All Hazard Emergency Management Act, for example, says the governor may issue "necessary orders" to carry out its provisions, and it specifically authorizes the governor to "prohibit" the "possession of firearms or any other deadly weapon by a person in any place other than his place of residence or business, except for peace officers."
Grisham relied heavily on these laws during the pandemic, when she issued many scientifically dubious edicts. In November 2020, for example, she banned outdoor activities and required New Mexicans to wear masks whenever they left their homes, which she said they should not do "unless it's an emergency or for an essential need like food and water."
Unlike gun violence, COVID-19 was a literal epidemic. But Grisham thinks both threats empower her to act like a dictator for however long she deems necessary. She repeatedly renewed her COVID-19 emergency orders, and she is threatening to do the same with her gun decree, which initially lasts for 30 days but can be renewed indefinitely.
It seems unlikely that the persistent, omnipresent threat of violent crime constitutes the sort of "emergency" that New Mexico legislators had in mind. But the more important point, repeatedly confirmed by state and federal courts, is that even properly defined emergencies do not nullify constitutional rights.
Two gun rights groups immediately challenged Grisham's order in federal court, noting that it defies last year's Supreme Court decision upholding the Second Amendment right to possess guns in public for self-defense. Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina and Bernalillo County Sheriff John Allen said they would not enforce the order, and two Republican state legislators said it was grounds for impeachment.
"I support gun safety laws," Rep. Ted Lieu (D–Calif.) said, but Grisham's order "violates the U.S. Constitution," and "there is no such thing as a state public health emergency exception to the U.S. Constitution." Gun control activist David Hogg concurred.
Raúl Torrez, New Mexico's Democratic attorney general, joined the chorus of critics on Tuesday. "I do not believe that the Emergency Order will have any meaningful impact on public safety," he wrote in a letter informing Grisham that his office would not defend the order. "More importantly, I do not believe it passes constitutional muster."
Grisham admitted that her order was unlikely to survive legal challenges and, even if it did, would not affect the behavior of criminals. But if it encourages legislators to reconsider the wisdom of letting governors rule by decree based on open-ended emergencies that they themselves declare, it will have served a useful purpose.
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Yes, there will be no gun rights In My Back Yard.
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In a just world, making a declaration like that would be grounds for immediate impeachment.
"Here's something I absolutely know is illegal and unconstitutional, I'm going to implement it by fiat." Very obviously a political stunt, all about power for the sake of power, attention for the sake of attention, and has nothing to do with governance. There should be repercussions to this governor.
Alas, this is not even close to a just world, she'll get away with it just fine.
Also, from the article, lots of "it's not an emergency " shit...
But the more important point, repeatedly confirmed by state and federal courts, is that even properly defined emergencies do not nullify constitutional rights.
Thank you for clearly writing that. In fact, I encourage you to write it a whole bunch more. Right at the top of any article about my rights being impinged illegitimately by any power hungry politician or functionary.
Or prosecution.
Yeah, at least prosecution. The action is a pretty overt and grandiose "I'd execute and/or sacrifice every last one of you motherfuckers for my fantasies and/or religious ideals."
Yeah. I'm sure she'd get QI, but damn I'd love to see her imprisoned for this bullshit. I wonder if we have a state level "Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law" statute. That seems like an appropriate charge. I suppose the federal one would suffice.
Now that'd be one I'd love to see SCOTUS rule in favor of... dunno that I trust them to do so, but perhaps, since this is such a direct fuck you to Bruen.
Didn’t New Mexico get rid of lot of QI?
No. QI is federal, and courts of all political persuasions keep making it worse. We did get rid of using our police as highway pirates, stealing money from tourists with false claims that the money people have must be drug money. Interestingly, a former DA, a Republican, signed the bill banning Civil Asset Forfeiture.
She already said it was probably unconstitutional and would get struck down. No QI for her because it was willful disregard of civil rights.
The (possible) advantage of prosecution is that it would disqualify her from seeking further office. Because that's almost certainly her goal. She admitted the same day she announced it that it would be a) ineffective and b) unconstitutional. She's also term-limited in her current role. It's a cynical ploy to get headlines in advance of her next run for office (presumably, the Senate).
I'd love to see us tar and feather every legislator who votes for a law later found to be unconstitutional. I'd settle for putting them out of business.
Yep. It smacks of treason actually.
"“Here’s something I absolutely know is illegal and unconstitutional, I’m going to implement it by fiat.”"
Joe Biden's student loan plan on line 1, eviction moratorium on line 2.
As a matter of fact, democrats seem to be way to comfortable with this playbook.
Ask yourself why are the democrats involved in supporting so much lawlessness?
Then note the condition of every democrat controlled city.
In a just world, the bitch would have been impeached on the same day, removed from office as fast as possible, and then prosecuted for attempting to violate the civil rights of the entire population of the state under color of authority.
What she deserves is 20 years in Forth Leavenworth to contemplate the error of her ways.
-jcr
Murders in Albuquerque are down 20% from last year, so NOW it's an emergency?
"I have emergency powers," she told The New York Times. "Gun violence is an epidemic. Therefore, it's an emergency."
Considering all the DUIs and drunk driving in that state, maybe the bitch should think about closing down the liquor stores instead of unilaterally trying to suspend a constitutional right.
You know what else is a blatantly unconstitutional power that Democrats constantly and compulsively push for?
EVERYTHING. The party is almost completely swamped with [Na]tional So[zi]alist soldiers/politicians and a fan-base who are completely determined on conquering and destroying the USA (US Constitution) for their Nazi-Regime.
The useful idiots are just too blinded by gov-media propaganda to acknowledge the very foundation of what they're actually fanning for: [Na]tional ?Democratic? (apparently not; though the exact same route Hitler took + emergency decry) So[zi]al[ism]. As history repeats itself over and over and over again.
Nazi? I don't believe so. More likely post modernist neo- Marixsm. The result of every college and university taught and staffed by these neo-Marxists.
As the saying goes," scratch a liberal and you'll find a dictator underneath."
Most of them are completely prideful about being ?Democratic? [Na]tional (i.e. federal) So[zi]alist[s].
https://www.britannica.com/event/Nazism
"Nazism, also spelled Naziism, in full National Socialism"
Just because Germans coined the abbreviation for "the [Na]tional So[ci]alist German Workers' Party" in the 30s doesn't mean no-one else can use it's abbreviation for its definition.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Marxism
"a theory and practice of socialism"
Two peas in the same pod.
"Believe all women"?
She does admit that law enforcement personnel in her state from local cops to the State AG have told her that the decree can't be enforced and is almost certainly unconstitutional; even if they find a judge who thinks it doesn't violate the federal 2A, apparently the State Constitution in NM has an even more aggressively protected right to bear arms, which specifically lists defense, hunting, and recreation as valid purposes which are not to be infringed.
She also acknowledges that the whole exercise isn't going to impact the behavior of criminals and won't actually make anyone safer.
The only part which beggars belief is that she still defends the declaration as important because she thinks that any show of activity, no matter how futile or illegal is somehow a moral imperative for her to engage in, but even that part appears to be fundamentally honest.
What should be brought into question is why anyone should be allowed to hold office who believes it's important to be attempting to do things which they acknowledge are both illegal and futile because they place such a high value on making symbolic gesture in that way.
Impeachment is too good for her, she needs to be shot. Pour encourager les autres.
And yet, I know of no republican who has proposed any law, at any level of government, seriously restricting executive emergency powers.
https://www.stlpr.org/health-science-environment/2021-06-15/parson-signs-law-limiting-power-of-local-officials-to-issue-emergency-health-orders
I think LTBF is being facetious or cryptically narrow. I know several conservative/Republican groups in IL, MI, and WI (and am pretty sure many in several other states) filed suits against many of these Emergency Action orders in 2019-2021 and many more filed suit and attempted or passed legislation at the repeated continuation and expansion actions.
I dunno if you're being ironic, but the NM Legislature actually passed a law limiting those powers. Lujan-Grisham vetoed the bill.
Maybe she only said she would veto such a bill and it didn't actually get passed. Maybe this will provide incentive to get that done.
https://nmbizcoalition.org/governor-plans-to-veto-and-bills-restricting-emergency-powers/
What purpose would there be to propose new legislation that does nothing more than require that the Executive Branch not exceed their authority under the State/Federal Constitution or other founding documents? Issues of redundancy aside, any such legislation would be dependent on enforcement by those same executive officials to have any meaningful impact on reality.
Even in CA, the courts tried to rein in Newsom back in 2020 to no avail (https://californiaglobe.com/articles/breaking-court-declares-gov-newsoms-abuse-of-power-unconstitutional/). The Chief Executive of a government might not be theoretically "above the law", but there's not really anyone with the authority to force them to comply with "checks and balances" unless they choose to obey on their own.
In fact, to the contrary.
The Arizona Constitution gives the governor no independent powers over citizens (otherwise known as "making laws") even in an emergency; only over government employees to ensure the continuation of government services in an emergency. Nevertheless, well before COVID, our Republican-heavy legislature passed a law specifying (unconstitutional) emergency ("king") powers for a governor. When COVID hit the fan, suddenly there were complaints.
Now the legislature just passed another law (HCR2039) to "limit" the governor's (still unconstitutional) emergency powers. But wait -- in the meanwhile, the unconstitutionality has been pointed out to them, so part of this bill is to create a referendum to amend the state constitution with language to make these "king" powers constitutional! They know they're doing this, and they don't care.
They will sell the referendum with "this change is to limit the governor's powers" instead of "this change gives the new governor powers he never really had before." And the suckers will fall for it.
The sponsors handwaved our objections as follows:
"Many have appropriately wondered where the legislature derives the authority to enact such statutes that delegate this awesome authority to the Governor and how they are even constitutional. After all, there isn’t an explicit provision in the Arizona constitution saying they can. But this is a key aspect of our system of governance. Unlike the U.S. Constitution, which consists of explicit enumerated powers for Congress, states have inherent powers, like the police powers, and state constitutions act to limit, not explicitly enumerate each one of them.
Whether we like it or not, we have a long history of courts interpreting these inherent police powers of states broadly."
Republicans are doing this. And don't try to tell me it's not deliberate.
"But the more important point, repeatedly confirmed by state and federal courts, is that even properly defined emergencies do not nullify constitutional rights."
I have to wonder about that. Has there really been a Court ruling that restricts a Governor's powers during a "declared" emergency? I've seen plenty of statements by Courts that a Governor's use of emergency powers was unconstitutional, but, not a ruling while those powers were being used. Nor have I seen where a Governor was held accountable for the use of those powers.
The courts usually move too slow to catch a declared emergency in the act, it seems.
One of the first gun rights wins following McDonald was on this very topic. Alan Gura sued North Carolina for disarming the populace during declared emergencies, Bateman v. Perdue. The gov at the time the decision came out supported the ruling so the case did not go past the fed district court.
https://californiaglobe.com/articles/breaking-court-declares-gov-newsoms-abuse-of-power-unconstitutional/
She "did something". Not her fault she was stymied by that damned Constitution. If not for that all our problems would be solved.
“She’s right up there with Schumer in the “most punchable face” category.
Not that I would ever…
I put Schiff in that same category.
The fact that she admits her order wouldn't be followed by criminals indicates her only interest is in punishing law abiding gun owners.
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham thinks violent crime gives her a license to rule by decree.
So did Murray Rothbard.
4. Take Back the Streets: Crush Criminals. And by this I mean, of course, not “white collar criminals” or “inside traders” but violent street criminals – robbers, muggers, rapists, murderers. Cops must be unleashed, and allowed to administer instant punishment, subject of course to liability when they are in error.
Are you so retarded you think robbery, rape and murder are constitutionally protected rights?
I think the vaccine must have shrunk your brain.
Are you so retarded as to believe that police are judge, jury, and executioner - ooh but the dead guy has a chance to prove his innocence after he's dead.
Judge Dredd operates in an environment where crime is so ubiquitous that the courts are less than useless at that point. That kind of state is how you get a Bukele in charge, and people love him for it because locking up violent criminals results in a society where people feel safe to walk the streets in what had been gang war zones.
Well stated. High domestic popularity and high/increasing numbers of refugees. Those can go together.
That's most of California these days. My wife now won't go out shopping unless I go with her. We've been experiencing armed robberies and car jackings in such "bad areas" as the Costo and Target parking lots.
It used to just be catalytic converter thefts.
For some of us, who are sick of the enablement of the criminals, unleashing a police force would be well supported. But sadly, it's impossible because we have little police force now. Even with offers of $75,000 first year signing bonuses, there aren't many takers.
I bring up Bukele because it's instructive to note how bad El Salvador really got before finally said, "Enough" and started throwing everyone with gang tats in prison. Despite the whinging of human rights groups, the policy has been supported by most of the country because people finally feel safe enough to walk the streets for the first time in decades, and they aren't being shaken down by the gangs with the threat of murder hanging over their heads.
That's how bad it will have to get before anything will get done, and it certainly won't happen as long as any of the neo-marxist left are allowed any kind of say.
Add another word or term to the mix of words and terms that the democrats have rendered meaningless. I give you "emergency".
Gun control belongs to the individual states. The feds are forbidden any say in gun control one way or the other -- if you follow the constitution and ignore both the GOP and the Dems.
https://bit.ly/3trpriB June 9, 2022, CityWatch, Only The Federal Government is Constitutionally Barred from Control, by Richard Lee Abrams
The best way to identify someone who has no use for the constitution is to hard him claim how much he loves the Constitution because its says exactly what he wants it to say. By the time a kid got out of elementary school and certainly by the time he finished Regents high school American history in 1950's New York, he/she knew that the 2d amendment was to protect the states from a too powerful central government.
Not so fast. The second amendment is an individual right and even the states cannot confiscate that.
You must have missed Heller and McDonald. The Second Amendment was finally incorporated under the 14th. States are no longer free to violate it.
There needs to be a much-quicker court mechanism for dealing with politicians/office-holders who flagrantly violated the Constitutution and/or their oath of office.
The simple fact that Grisham limited her lawless action to 30 days indicates that she believes she can get away with it for 30 days. Then what? --- take a day off and then reinstituted the lawlessness and get another 30 days, rinse and repeat, again and again?
I doubt you would understand the 2d amendment even if you read it.
Only a total garbage site would allow a clown like you to post malicious ad hominem BS.
You haven’t met SQRLSY yet have you?
There are too many people who fail to comprehend what the First Amendment says.
The correct answer is simple, yet since it would probably require Congress to enact the mechanism it will never happen.
The correct answer is that anytime the courts rule a law, regulation, edict, Executive Order, etc. to be unconstitutional the judges MUST rule if anyone was inconvenienced by the decree, or forced to spend money defending against it. If so, the ruling should AUTOMATICALLY result in criminal charges against EVERY individual involved in creating the edict (i.e. President who signed it; Congresspersons / Senators who voted for it; outside interest groups who drafted it; regulatory boards who approved it - whatever) for conspiracy to violate our Constitutional rights. If a court of law decides they were MERELY ignorant, then MERELY expel them from their positions, bar them from government service, and move on. However, if it is a blatant disregard for our rights (like the endless list of new and creative ways Demunists try to violate the 1st and 2nd Amendments), then imprison them all for ten years in addition to expelling them from their positions, revoking their pensions, and barring them from future government service.
We would quickly see a very Libertarian society.
Oooh, I like that. No chance of it happening but it's a nice dream.
I agree. It will never happen but it's nice to imagine.
Zero.
That's the number of exceptions our Constitution makes for government violating our rights.
MLG is, without a doubt, the worst governor we've had in my 70 years as a New Mexican. We have slowly drifted to the bottom of every good list and the top of every bad list, as Democrats become more and more in control of all aspects of government. We are #49 in our economy, and the poorer we become, the more we vote Democrat, so the government checks will keep coming.
I fear we're past the tipping point, with no real hope of once again becoming a good place to live. Crime is rampant in the Albuquerque area, and it's not far behind in Las Cruces, the Democratic-controlled second largest city. These two cities make up over half of New Mexico's population.
That is distressing to hear. New Mexico is a lovely place. Democrats are a scourge.
That's how Democrats/socialists work: they destroy the economy and make people government dependent so that they then believe that they must vote Democrat or starve. It's no accident.
Don't forget, the democrats also legalize crime.
That's what happens when a free state lets a bunch of Californians in. And, it almost always starts with the Hollywood elites.
And people think illegal immigration is bad.......
Executives have a wide-ranging ability to do such things. But if the legislature disapproves, they can instantly pass a law against it or remove the executive from power. It appears that the legislature doesn't care enough to do such a thing, so why would they "reconsider the wisdom"? Many of them would love to pass such a ban anyway.
The primary problem here is with voters who elect such a legislature and such a fascist governor in the first place.
Fortunately, courts and many government employees are still safety valves in the US system that put a stop to such blatant abuses of power.
Fortunately, courts and many government employees are still safety valves in the US system that put a stop to such blatant abuses of power.
Have no fear, the commies in the law schools are working on that as we speak. And lest anyone think I’m being hyperbolic, I was warning people on the right that they couldn’t just wave off shit like “microaggressions,” “whiteness” critiques or “gender studies” during the 2000s, because in about 15-20 years the same loud-mouthed campus activists and the students being taught this shit would be in corporate America and mid-upper tier government positions, and influencing socio-economic policy.
Until the cancer of marxism infecting academia is cut out, this shit is just going to continue getting worse.
I saw this start in the 1980s already.
I have no fear,, I'm just a realist. Countries go bad and you leave them. It's just the way the world works.
It's like, if you're standing under a tree when you're caught in a rainstorm, and you're dry for a while but then the tree gets wet, you just move to different trees until the rain stops.
Those loud-mouth activists already are in such positions. I worked in local government for half my career. They're entrenched. They answer only to themselves.
That's why they get so alarmed by the right getting involved in local elections and deflect on issues like school policy being "culture war issues." They're desperately trying to maintain hold on the institutions that the center-right convinced the GOP to let them have over the last 30 years, as long as they could get their tax cuts and foreign wars.
You can't blame her too much. This is the obvious result of post menopausal hormone spike that sent her brain off the rails.
The fact that people on her own side are telling her, "What the fuck are you thinking here with this" is a pretty good indication that this is the case, but I suspect it had more to do with the pigeons at Moms Demand Action recommending it to her as a "stake-planting" measure in order to push the Overton window. And if it was done via non-state communications, it's going to be hard to get that info via a public records request unless this whole thing actually goes to court.
Weren't emergency declarations dealt a blow with the 3A and 4A?
The one factor left out of this article and discussion is how much of the population supports these kinds of edicts.
In my 66 years in this country, I've never seen the population so willing to bow to the overlords and be supportive of authoritarianism. After all, they know best. Don't they?
The murder rate in Albuquerque is DOWN 20% from last year. So now it's an emergency? The difference is, our Nazi governor was up for reelection this time last year. She knows full well she'd have lost the election if she'd pulled this stunt last year at this time.